About

Wyoming Boys’ State, held annually in June, is a chance for high school juniors from across the state to participate in a week’s worth of activities to gain knowledge of their state and its governmental structure. Delegates learn first-hand how government works, experiencing what it takes to create and enact laws. The week emphasizes leadership, civic engagement and patriotism.

Speakers include Wyoming’s Governor and members of Wyoming’s congressional delegation. In the process of working together, the delegates develop life-long friendships.

The week culminates with a visit to the State Capitol in Cheyenne, where Delegates occupy the House and Senate Chambers, as well as the various offices and agencies of Wyoming’s government. Delegates have the opportunity to meet the governor and many of his staff members in this full day of activities.

Board of Directors

Joel Defebaugh

Joel Defebaugh

Chairman

Bill Frye

Bill Frye

Vice-Chairman

Brett Kahler

Brett Kahler

Treasurer

Todd Johnson

Todd Johnson

Secretary

Steven Anselmi-Stith

Steven Anselmi-Stith

Member

Staff

Ian Fletcher

Ian Fletcher

Sam Mittleider

Sam Mittleider

History

Boys’ State was born of a desire to counter the Fascist inspired Young Pioneer Camps of the 1930s, where boys of high school age were being taught that democracy had outworn its usefulness and should be replaced by a new form of government, namely Fascism. The Boys’ State program was formulated in the minds of Legionnaires Hayes Kennedy and Harold Card, both educators and both members of The American Legion of Illinois. It was their desire to start a counter movement within the ranks of American youth that would develop a better understanding of our system of government, and to instill in our youth a desire to preserve it.

The format for Boys’ State was laid out by Harold Card and fashioned from a method employed by him in earlier years to properly police and organize a Boy Scout camp. Shorthanded on staff, he permitted the boys to govern themselves, hold an election and elect a mayor and a city council. Appointments were made to cover positions like police, fire, health and sanitation officials. Harold Card quickly found that the boys became so enthused in carrying out their ‘city’ duties, they almost neglected their Scout assignments. The boys were learning by doing.

The first Boys’ State was conducted at the Illinois State Fairgrounds, Springfield, Illinois, in June, 1935. Now, over 75 years later, the program is still providing that opportunity to young men . . . to learn by doing, and through this time well over one million young men have experienced American Legion Boys’ State. Though Fascism no longer poses a threat in today’s world, our way of life is still threatened by forms of government alien to our democratic ideals, and by apathy among our own citizens. The American Legion continues to sponsor and to conduct Boys’ State in the belief that young citizens who are familiar with the operation of our system of government will be better prepared to uphold its ideals and maintain it for future.